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A HUMANISTIC READING OF GASPAR SANZ’S INSTRVCCIONDE MVSICA SOBRE LA GVITARRA ESPAnOLA A thesis submitted to the faculty of San Francisco State University A 5 In partial fulfillment of 3 & The requirements for M b The Degree MvS»C £ ( 4 Master of Arts v. a In Music By Lars Christian Rosager San Francisco, California, USA May 2016 Copyright by Lars Christian Rosager 2016 212 Chapter Six: Figured-Bass Rules One through Six In The Early Baroque Era: From the Late Sixteenth Century to the 1660s (1994), both Curtis Price and Louise Stein recognize the comparatively early uptake of figured bass in Spain. Both Price and Stein point to the quintessentially Spanish tradition of solo song with vihuela or guitar accompaniment.375 The familiar custom of pairing a vocalist with a lute-family instrument seems to have acted as a channel through which the innovative practice of figured bass was able to assert itself in Spain, where, in general, foreign advances in music were otherwise slow to put down roots.376 At the courts and academies of northern Italy, figured bass in published form was first seen in the works of Jacopo Peri (1561-1633), Giulio Caccini (1551-1618), and Emilio de’ Cavalieri (ca. 1550-1602). Composer Lodovico da Viadana (ca. 1560-1627) was also central to the promulgation of the new mode of accompaniment 377 Scholarly opinion generally reaches the consensus that the new Italian style of accompanying made its way to Spain in the early-seventeenth century. However, one finds vestiges of practices that, while perhaps not universally accepted as figured bass per se, suggest the Spanish had a significant interest in systems of musical shorthand that would allow for improvised accompaniment over a notated bass 375. Curtis Price, “Music, Style and Society,” in The Early Baroque, 10. 376. Stein, “Spain,” in The Early Baroque, 330. 377. Marla Hammel, ‘The Figured-Bass Accompaniment in Bach’s Time: A Brief Summary of Its Development and an Examination of Its Use, Together with a Sample Realization, Part I,” Bach 8, no. 3 (1977): 27, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41640029. 213 line. Marla Hammel reports on the Spanish musician Diego Ortiz (ca. 1510-ca. 1570), author of the 1553 work Tratado de glosas sopra clausulas y otros generos de puntos en la musica de violones (Treatise on the Ornamentation of Cadences and Other Kinds of Notes in the Music for the Contrabass-Viol): “One of the suggestions which Ortiz gives to the violone player . is that he might play an ornate melody while the cembalo [harpsichord] is providing an accompaniment over a given bass, consisting of chords and counterpoints suitable to the melody.”378 Ortiz worked under Spanish nobility stationed in Naples, where Spain had exerted viceregal authority since 1504.379 Just as the harpsichord was generally excluded from the normal Spanish continuo ensemble of organ, harp, and vihuela (or guitar), so could it have been in Neapolitan practice? Seeing as Spain was the ruling power, one is not surprised to find that archetypically Spanish plucked strings figured prominently in the musical life of Naples and nearby Rome. More so in southern Italy than in the north, the guitar proves to be a logical antecedent to the establishment of figured bass, a learned practice indebted to popular, auro-oral customs. James Tyler stresses the importance of the influence of south-Italian music on the Florentine Camerata, the famed academic circle within which the study of Greco-Roman music shaped monody, the new and immeasurably pivotal compositional technique that 378. Hammel, ‘The Figured-Bass Accompaniment,” 27, brackets and ellipsis mine. 379. Encyclopcedia Britannica Online, s.v. “Kingdom of Naples,” http://www.britannica.com/place/Kingdom-of-Naples. 214 was to be so crucial to opera. Figured bass is definitive of the monodic style, as well as being tied to the four- and five-course guitars of southern Italy, particularly the Spanish territory of Naples. Tyler summarizes, Recent ground-breaking research [These words of Tyler’s were published in 2002] by Howard Mayer Brown and, especially, John Walter Hill has demonstrated the singular importance of south-Italian singing and accompanying practices, including the flexible sprezzatura (an artistic, seemingly nonchalant use of rubato and other dramatic devices to express the emotional content of song texts); the incorporation of recitational style and improvised, florid ornamentation; and the style of accompaniment, wherein simple harmonies derived from the bass line were played on a chordal instrument, often by the singer. Hill has noted also that many of the performers and composers employed at the northern courts, who played leading roles in the development of monody, were either Roman, Neapolitan, or trained by south Italians.380 Caccini and Cavalieri are counted among these performers and composers employed in the north. The historical motif of the guitar as an instrument suitable for self­ accompaniment crops up repeatedly in the operatic milieu. It is an accurate reissue of ancient musico-mythological imagery. Tyler relates the Renaissance practice to a more modem context: Apparently, it was common practice in sixteenth-century Rome and Naples to sing poetry to the accompaniment of standard recitational formulas. Sometimes these formulas were composed for a specific occasion, using a simple harmony and a neutral, almost chant-like melodic line; but more often than not a stock harmonic ground, such as the Romanesca, Tenor di Napoli, Ruggiero, or Passamezzo antico, played on a lute, cittern, or, above all, a guitar, was used to support the text. This style of singing a text to a chord pattern (not necessarily with a high degree of melodic profile) may be likened somewhat to a mid­ 380. Tyler and Sparks, “The Guitar and Its Music,” 37, brackets mine. 215 twentieth-century coffeehouse poet or folk-club vocalist, intoning or singing to a standard blues chord progression. Of course, in the Renaissance the practice was not confined to popular culture; indeed, the most celebrated court singers cultivated it to the level of high art.381 To emphasize the humanistic, Tyler’s digression into modernity becomes increasingly captivating when one contemplates the sociopolitical underpinning of twentieth-century popular song. Strains of dissidence in twentieth- and twenty-first- century music for voice with guitar-based accompaniment highlight moral philosophy within the genre. In this light one may view Renaissance and modem popular music alike, representatives of, as Ayn Rand writes, “art as a social document.”382 Returning to the Renaissance period, Tyler notes that the 1520s saw the spread of south-Italian music for voice and lute-family instruments across Italy and into other parts of Europe.383 This musical style was not without precedent in Naples, where the courts and academies of the late 1400s were graced by the improvisations of dall’Aquila and II Chariteo. Hence, the history of figured bass, like that of a humanistically inspired conception of the guitar on a more general level, finds common ground with the history of Spanish humanism typified by the work of DiCamillo; far from purely Italian, the formation of figured bass owes much to Spanish culture. The body of written works by Spanish music theorists does little to confirm the presence of figured-bass practice during the time between the works of Mudarra and 381. Tyler and Sparks, “The Guitar and Its Music,” 38. 382. Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead (New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1943), 69. 383. Tyler and Sparks, “The Guitar and Its Music” 38. 216 Sanz. Howell finds that the period in question furnishes but one hasty treatment of figured bass, a single page in Elporque de la musica by Lorente.384 Yet, looking to the method book of Amat, one encounters in print a viable comparison to the pre-Florentine Camerata accompaniment styles of southern Italy described above. The eighth chapter of Amat’s Guitarra deals with an expeditious intabulation procedure. Setting forth a rather ambitious claim, Amat proposes a table in which the six syllables of the hexachord are paired with guitar chords in order to enable the swift conversion of any polyphonic piece of music to guitar tablature.385 384. Howell, “Symposium,” 65. 385. Amat, Guitarra, 28-37. 217 Example 27. Using this table, Amat explains how to assign guitar triads to the sonorities of fully notated scores.386 d: f n n lq rlJ fa, ut, i 2 6 , 7 9ic n 12 » ■ ■ * h r fol, re, 1 1 12 IO h J i rn n m iJ, 9 .o 7 cS r—- fa j I2 ! 3 10 11 12 i I »—* IP i Q d m n lit, fol, |2J i 5 7, 8' 9 ic it re, la, 10*11 12 I 2 5, * , 7 f ‘ i 11, mi xbzbjd b i t m tn b p b qb.rb 8 1 9 1011112] I | 2 3'1 4 S 6 1 7-i 386. Amat, Guitarra, 31. 218 Example 28. An unidentified piece arranged by Amat.387 Alto* J&tete b b bb bbbbb t>b * * 3 & 45 7 85 ?4-?4 * 7 S *7 5 47<*'S* m ------------ At first glance, the figures over the bass look nearly identical to that which one might find in a figured-bass part. The numbers actually indicate chord shapes though, not intervals from the bass. Amat’s is a system similar to the Italian alfabeto employed by Sanz. A full explanation of Amat’s method of intabulating polyphony would be too extensive for the present study; briefly, the process consists of following the lowest voice of the notated composition and, according to the consonances among the other voices, choosing one of twenty-four chord shapes so that the harmonies are most accurately encapsulated.

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